Keijō nippō | |
Format: | Broadsheet |
Political: | Pro-Empire of Japan |
Language: | Japanese |
Headquarters: | Keijō, Korea, Empire of Japan |
was a Japanese-language newspaper published in Korea from 1906 to 1945. It is primarily associated with the Japanese colonial period in Korea, and is considered to have functionally been an official newspaper of the Japanese Governor-General of Chōsen.[1] [2] [3]
During its peak around World War II, it was considered the top newspaper published in Korea, followed by the Fuzan nippō and Chōsen shinbun.[4] Due to press centralization policies, from around 1942 to 1945 it was the only newspaper in Seoul with significant printing equipment.
However, upon the August 15, 1945 announcement of the surrender of Japan, it became greatly destabilized. With support from the remnants of the colonial government, it continued printing until October 31, 1945, in order to keep the Japanese residents of Korea informed of political developments. After which, it was ordered to hand off the operation to Korean people. They published for the remaining Japanese people in Korea until December 11. Its equipment, staff, and facilities then became part of various Korean newspapers.
Many of its early issues are now considered lost after they were destroyed by fire. The Korean Newspaper Archive has many issues from 1915 to 1945 available.[5]
Japan began moving to incorporate Korea as its protectorate in the 1900's, and began publishing newspapers that promoted these themes and advocated for further Japanese control. Japan's agenda was soon confronted by the English- and Korean-language newspaper The Korea Daily News, run by British journalist in Korea Ernest Bethell, which dodged Japanese censorship and criticized Japan's treatment of Korea sharply.[6] In response, Japanese Resident-General of Korea Itō Hirobumi began issuing an English-language newspaper to counter Bethell's, entitled The Seoul Press. Japan also applied pressure on both Bethell and the British government to stop the newspaper's publication. Bethell died in 1909 after a years-long legal battle, and his newspaper was sold and converted into the Maeil sinbo, which promoted Japanese government lines.[7]
The Keijō nippō was formed via a merger between around seven pro-Japanese newspapers in Korea, namely the Kanjō shinpō and Daitō shinpō. These two papers were acquired by the Japanese Resident-General of Korea in July and early August 1906.[8] [9] Resident-General Itō played a significant role in the Keijō nippō's creation, and even reportedly proposed the name of the paper.[10] It is believed the paper was founded specifically to counter Bethell's papers.
The paper was approved for creation on August 10, 1906, and published its first issue on September 1 of that year.[11] [12] The original headquarters was located in what is now Pil-dong, on the north side of the mountain Namsan. Its first president was a former editor-in-chief of The Asahi Shimbun, Itō Yūkan . It was initially published with both Japanese and Korean editions, but it stopped publishing Korean editions on either April 21 or September 21, 1907 possibly due to a lack of public interest in the publication. The newspaper's publication was temporarily restricted a number of times in 1908 because it published critically about Itō's handling of instability in the peninsula. The paper advocated for harsher crackdowns on militant unrest.[13]
On August 30, 1910, the Maeil Sinbo and Keijō nippō were consolidated under a company Keijō Nippōsha (京城日報社), with the former's offices located inside the latter's headquarters. In 1910, the Keijō nippō was put under the management of Tokutomi Sohō. Tokutomi was president of the major Tokyo-based newspaper . He brought many of his trusted journalist friends to Seoul to work on the paper. The papers became so tied together, that journalists of Keijō nippō reportedly jokingly called their office the "branch office" and the Kokumin office "headquarters". The paper published along Japanese government lines, promoting the annexation and discouraging independence sentiment.In November 1914, it moved headquarters to the current location of the Seoul City Hall. Its headquarters was destroyed in a fire in 1923. The former location became the city hall, and the new headquarters finished construction on June 15, 1924 nearby, at what is today the location of the headquarters of the . The Seoul Press was integrated into the Keijō nippō in 1930.
World War II was a time of significant change for the media landscape in Korea. During this period, the Keijō nippō consolidated its position of prominence.[14]
On April 29, 1938, Maeil Sinbo became independent from Keijō nippō.[15] The two papers had long resented each other; staff of the more stable and profitable Keijō nippō reportedly felt that they were keeping Maeil Sinbo financially afloat, and dubbed the Korean paper "The Cancer of the Keijō nippō". On that same day, the Keijō Nippōsha began publishing a Japanese-language daily newspaper for children called Keinichi shōgakkōsei shinbun (京日少學生新聞), which renamed to Keinichi shōkokumin shinbun (京日少國民新聞) from April 1942.
A number of Japanese policies during this period made market conditions more favorable to the Keijō nippō. Education in the Korean language was banned, and the use of the Japanese language became required in a number of settings. In 1940, the Japanese government began a policy that has been dubbed "One Province, One Company", under which Japanese- and Korean-language newspapers were made to consolidate or close. The Chōsen shinbun was merged into the Keijō nippō.[16] Furthermore, the Korean newspapers The Chosun Ilbo and The Dong-A Ilbo were forced to close, and their printing equipment was transferred to the ownership of the Keijō nippō. By the time of Korea's 1945 liberation, the Keijō nippō was the only facility with significant printing equipment in Seoul. From 1942 to 1943, the newspaper's circulation increased by 200,000, and Koreans came to form 60% of the paper's customer base.
On August 15, 1945, Japan's loss in World War II was announced, which signaled the liberation of Korea. The Keijō nippō was informed of the announcement the evening prior, and had already prepared an article for the announcement. Shortly after the announcement, it published its article.[17] Around this time, the newspaper company had around 2,000 employees, of which 100 were Korean. Its circulation was around 410,000 copies, and its Shōkokumin Shinbun had around 390,000 copies.[18] Its final president was .The Japanese colonial bureau of information instructed Yokomizo to continue publishing, in order to support the Japanese settlers still remaining in Korea. Korean employees of the paper requested that the paper be handed over to them on the 16th, and the Keijō nippō leadership refused. Korean workers went on strike; sand was thrown into the rotary press, which stopped the publication of the August 17 and 18 issues. On August 18, Yokomizo created a handmade mimeograph edition of the paper, in which he relayed orders from the colonial government to maintain public order. The newspaper's employees were paid a three-month salary in advance, in anticipation of further instability.
For months afterwards, the newspaper's monopoly over printing equipment became a topic of contention for Koreans. Korean employees and various left- and right-leaning Korean groups began advocating for seizing the newspaper's facilities. For example, the left-leaning made an attempt to seize the equipment. However, around 100 Japanese troops were stationed at the offices, which prevented any Korean seizures. A faction of left-leaning Korean employees split off and founded their own newspaper, on September 8.[19]
The United States Army Military Government in Korea placed Seoul and Korea below the 38th parallel into an occupation zone in early September.[20] They placed the Keijō nippō under their control on September 25. The paper continued publishing for its Japanese audience until November 1, until they were ordered (Order no. 13,746) to hand over the operation to the Koreans. Still, the Koreans continued sharing information for Japanese people, in coordination with the . The newspaper ceased publication on December 11, 1945.
The Chosun Ilbo and The Dong-a Ilbo resumed publication and used the printing equipment. Its equipment was also used by the 1945–1950 newspaper Hanseong Ilbo .[21]
How Koreans are described in the newspaper has often been described by modern scholars as condescending and discriminatory. Koreans who opposed Japanese policies were often described in the paper as backward "barbarians". They were frequently contrasted with the "civilized" Japanese settlers. After the nationwide pro-independence March First Movement protests in Korea, the paper mocked the activists. It wrote in its March 7 edition that Koreans lacked an understanding of all the Japan had done for it, and that they were incapable of self-governance. An article read: "Koreans believe that after the President of the United States [<nowiki/>[[Woodrow Wilson]]] established the League of Nations, even small and weak countries would avoid the domination of Great Powers, and be able to maintain their national independence. How foolish they are!" The writer concluded with "Ah, [you] pitiful Koreans! You are governed by evil thoughts... Awake! Awake! ...If you do not have an understanding of the situation of the world, you will be doomed to perish."[22]
The newspaper published literature in its pages. According to the Korean Newspaper Archive, rather than simply print stories about people in Japan, it often printed stories about people in colonial Korea.
The Keijō Nippōsha sponsored a number of cultural events, including concerts, film screenings, and lectures.
1929 | 26,352 | ||
1933 | 35,592 | ||
1935 | 34,294 | ||
1939 | 61,976 | ||
1945 | 410,000 |